Journal of Nuclear Engineering (Jan 2022)

Fourth-Order Adjoint Sensitivity and Uncertainty Analysis of an OECD/NEA Reactor Physics Benchmark: II. Computed Response Uncertainties

  • Ruixian Fang,
  • Dan Gabriel Cacuci

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jne3010001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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This work quantifies the impact of the most important 4th-order sensitivities of the leakage response of a polyethylene-reflected plutonium (PERP) reactor physics benchmark with respect to the benchmark’s 180 group-averaged microscopic total cross sections, on the expected value, variance and skewness of the benchmark’s leakage response. This work shows that, as the standard deviations of the cross sections increase, the contributions of the 4th-order sensitivities to the response’s expected value and variance become significantly larger than the corresponding contributions stemming from the 1st-, 2nd- and 3rd-order sensitivities. Considering a uniform 5% relative standard deviation for all microscopic total cross sections, the contributions from the 4th-order sensitivities to the expected value and variance of the PERP leakage response amount to 56% and 52%, respectively. Considering 10% uniform relative standard deviations for the microscopic total cross sections, the contributions from the 4th-order sensitivities to the expected value increase to nearly 90%. Consequently, if the computed value L(a) were considered to represent the actual expected value of the leakage response and the 4th-order sensitivities were neglected, the computed value would represent the actual expected value with an error of 3400%. Furthermore, uniform relative standard deviations of 5% and larger (10%) for the microscopic total cross sections cause the higher-order sensitivities to contribute increasingly higher amounts to the response standard deviation: the contributions stemming from the 4th-order sensitivities are larger than the contributions stemming from the 3rd-order sensitivities, which in turn are larger than those stemming from the 2nd-order sensitivities, which are themselves larger than the contributions stemming from the 1st-order sensitivities. This finding evidently underscores the need for computing sensitivities of order higher than first-order. The results obtained in this work also indicate that the 4th-order sensitivities produce a positive response skewness, causing the leakage response distribution to be skewed towards the positive direction from its expected value. Increasing the parameter standard deviations tends to decrease the value of the response skewness, causing the leakage response distribution to become more symmetrical about the mean value. The results presented in this work highlight the finding that the microscopic total cross section for hydrogen (H) in the lowest (“thermal”) energy group is the single most important parameter among the 180 microscopic total cross sections of the PERP benchmark, as it contributes most to the various response moments.

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